LFG BULLETIN DECEMBER 2001 ------------------------------ * LINGUISTICS IN THE NEWS * --------------------------------- The Dialect of Bushonics "These people are greatly misunderestimated," says University of Texas linguistics professor James Bundy, himself a Bushonics speaker. "They're not lacking in intelligence facilities by any stretch of the mind. They just have a differing way of speechifying." For the full story, see http://www.salon.com/politics/feature/2001/03/19/bushonics/index.html ---------------- * OTHER NEWS * ---------------- Recent LFG Publications: ------------------------ The LFG01 PROCEEDINGS are out! http://cslipublications.stanford.edu/LFG/6/lfg01.html This year's collection is very comprehensive as all but two papers were submitted to the proceedings. Joan BRESNAN. 2001. The Emergence of the Unmarked Pronoun. In Optimality-theoretic Syntax, edited by Geraldine Legendre, Sten Vikner, and Jane Grimshaw. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press. Joan BRESNAN. 2001. Explaining Morphosyntactic Competition. In Handbook of Contemporary Syntactic Theory, ed. by Mark Baltin and Chris Collins, 11--44. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers. Peter SELLS. 2001. Form and Function in the Typology of Grammatical Voice Systems. 2001. In G. Legendre, J. Grimshaw, and S. Vikner (eds.) Optimality-Theoretic Syntax. Cambridge, MIT Press. Several PhD Theses have also been completed this year and are now available over the Internet: Jonas KUHN. 2001. Formal and Computational Aspects of Optimality-theoretic Syntax. PhD Dissertation, IMS, Universität Stuttgart. http://www.ims.uni-stuttgart.de/~jonas/diss/ Hanjung LEE. 2001. Optimization in Argument Expression and Interpretation: A Unified Approach. Stanford, California: Stanford University Department of Linguistics Ph.D. dissertation. http://roa.rutgers.edu/view.php3?roa=461 Simon MUSGRAVE. 2001. Non-Subject Arguments in Indonesian. Melbourne, Australia: University of Melbourne Department of Linguistics and Applied Linguistics Ph.D. dissertation. http://www.let.leidenuniv.nl/ulcl/faculty/musgrave/papers.html Ida TOIVONEN. 2001. The Phrase Structure of Non-Projecting Words. Stanford, California: Stanford University Department of Linguistics Ph.D. dissertation. http://www.stanford.edu/~toivonen/toivonen-thesis.pdf (Please send us the citation for your recent publications to include in the next issue; announcements of publicly available theses are encouraged.) Upcoming LFG Conferences: ------------------------- - LFG2003, State University of New York, Albany local Organizer: Prof. G. Aaron Broadwell email contact: g.broadwell@albany.edu Exact dates are yet to be determined. - LFG2002, Athens, 3-5 July 2002 *Abstract submission receipt deadline: 15 FEBRUARY 2002* organizers: Dr. Yanis Maistros Dr. Stella Markantonatou email: marks@ilsp.gr web page: http://thais.cs.ece.ntua.gr/LFG2002/ Call for papers available at: http://thais.cs.ece.ntua.gr/LFG2002/FirstCall.html [An abbreviated version is included here.] The conference will primarily involve 30-minute talks, poster/system presentations and workshops. Talks and poster presentations will focus on results from completed as well as ongoing research, with an emphasis on novel approaches, methods, ideas, and perspectives, whether descriptive, theoretical, formal or computational. Presentations should describe original, unpublished work. This year we encourage an active poster session. All presenters will be invited to display posters and to have a chance to chat in more detail with participants about their work. In addition we will accept papers for poster presentation only. Poster presenters will be asked not to use their laptops in their presentations. Workshops are a small group of talks (2-4) on a coherent topic that can be expected to generate opposing views and discussion with the broader audience. Participants to workshops are usually invited. Workshop papers should be distributed in advance among participants and participants should refer to each others approaches. At this point in time, we welcome suggestions for workshops from potential organisers or people with certain interests. Suggestions for workshops should be sent to the local organizers at: marks@ilsp.gr This year we are hoping to hold a special session consisting of invited presentations from students who have (or will have by the time of the conference) recently completed PhD dissertations involving some aspect of LFG. Such students (and/or their supervisors) are invited to contact the program committee chairs for further information (see the addresses below). Deadline for receipt of talk submissions: 15 February 2002 Late deadline for poster-only submissions: 15 March 2002 Acceptances sent out: 31 March 2002 Deadline for workshop submissions: 15 January 2002 Workshop acceptances: 15 February 2002 Submissions should be in the form of abstracts only. Abstracts should be one A4 page in 10pt or larger type and include a title. Omit name and affiliation, and obvious self reference. A second page may be used for data, c-/f- and related structures, and references. Submissions should indicate whether they wish to be considered only as a talk, as either a talk or a poster, or only as a poster/demonstration. In the absence of specification, submissions will be considered for both classes, and the program chairs may decide that certain submissions are better as poster presentations than as read papers. Abstracts may be submitted by email or by regular mail (or by both means as a safety measure). Email submission is preferred. Regular Mail: Include: - Eight copies of the abstract/paper. - A card or cover sheet with the paper title, name(s) of the author(s), affiliation, address, phone/fax number, e-mail address, and whether the author(s) are students. Email: Include the paper title, name(s) of the author(s), address, phone/fax number, email address, and whether the author(s) are students in the body of your email message. Include or preferably attach your paper as either a plain ASCII text, PDF, HTML, or postscript file. All abstracts will be reviewed by at least three people. Papers will appear in the proceedings, which will be published online by CSLI Publications. Selected papers may also appear in a printed volume published by CSLI Publications. ADDRESSES Abstract submissions and inquiries about submissions: Program Committee Chairs: Jonas Kuhn jonas@ims.uni-stuttgart.de Rachel Nordlingerracheln@unimelb.edu.au Mail: LFG2002 c/- Rachel Nordlinger Department of Linguistics and Applied Linguistics University of Melbourne VIC 3010 Australia ----------- * ILFGA * ----------- BE IN THE ILFGA DATABASE: Please add yourself to the ILFGA linguist database. To do so, send email to Chris Culy (culy@ai.sri.com) with the following information: NAME AFFILIATION OFFICIAL ADDRESS EMAIL ADDRESS WEB PAGE RESEARCH INTERESTS RESEARCH LANGUAGES The database can be accessed at: http://www-lfg.stanford.edu/lfg/ilfga/member-database/ilfga-namelist.html DONATE TO ILFGA: There are two ways to make a donation: 1. Send a check made out to "Intl. Lexical Functional Grammar Assc." in US dollars to: Tracy Holloway King NLTT/ISTL Xerox PARC 3333 Coyote Hill Rd Palo Alto, CA 94304 USA This is the simplest (and cheapest) method if you have access to US dollars. 2. Have money transfered directly into the account. Please let the ILFGA Treasurer, Tracy Holloway King (thking@parc.xerox.c,om)if you want to make a donation in this way. ILFGA is a 501(3)c organization (i.e. a non-profit) and as such contributions are tax deductible in the US (and perhaps elsewhere; if you are not in the US, check your home country for tax status). A receipt will be issued for each donation. JOIN ILFGA: If you haven't yet, you can still join ILFGA, the International Lexical Functional Grammar Association by sending mail to: majordomo@lists.stanford.edu with the message: subscribe ilfga-members ----------- * EDITORS * ----------- Please send updates, suggestions and news for inclusion in the next LFG Bulletin (March 2002) to: miriam.butt@uni-konstanz.de thking@parc.xerox.com Most importantly, please send information about: - your recent publications or papers - publically available grammars - current grammar development efforts - recent dissertations Thank you, Miriam Butt and Tracy Holloway King ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Frequently Asked Questions: FAQs Information on the following topics is available on the LFG WebPages: http://clwww.essex.ac.uk/LFG/ http://www-lfg.stanford.edu/lfg 1. WHAT IS LEXICAL-FUNCTIONAL GRAMMAR? 2. WHAT ARE THE BEST INTRODUCTORY BOOKS/ARTICLES TO LFG? 3. THE LFG WWW SITE 4. THE LFG MAILING LIST 5. LFG BIBLIOGRAPHY, RECENT PUBLICATIONS IN LFG 6. HOW TO RETRIEVE LFG DOCUMENTS 7. PUBLICALLY AVAILABLE LFG SYSTEMS 8. CURRENT GRAMMAR DEVELOPMENT EFFORT 9. UPCOMING EVENTS If you have access to ftp, but no access to Web, you can get a copy of the FAQ by ftp or email (see "How to Retrieve LFG Documents" below). Please help keep this document and the FAQ up to date! Send updates and suggestions for improvements to the FAQ to doug#essex.ac.uk. Send updates, suggestions and news for inclusion in the LFG Bulletin to miriam.butt@uni-konstanz.de or thking@parc.xerox.com, or post them on the LFG list (LFG@listserv.linguistlist.org). Most importantly, please send information about: - your recent publications or papers - publically available grammars - current grammar development efforts --- * HOW TO RETRIEVE LFG DOCUMENTS * Some LFG documents are available on the web, by FTP, or by email. There are three ways to get them. (1) Most of the documents are accessible via the WWW: The current version of the list of Frequently Asked Questions about LFG: http://www-lfg.stanford.edu/lfg/lfg-information.html Introductions to LFG: http://www-lfg.stanford.edu/lfg/clwww.essex.ac.uk/LFG/Introductions.html http://clwww.essex.ac.uk/LFG/Introductions.html The LFG bibliography: http://www-lfg.stanford.edu/lfg/bibliography.html http://clwww.essex.ac.uk/LFG/Bibliography.html The bibliography is also available at the CL/MT Group Bibliographic Search Page, maintained by Doug Arnold of the University of Essex. The URL is: http://clwww.essex.ac.uk/search/ (2) You can get the documents by anonymous FTP from: ftp ftp-lfg.stanford.edu All of the documents are in subdirectories of the directory /pub/lfg. Here is a list of some of the files in that directory that are relevant for LFG researchers: in the directory /pub/lfg/bibliography: The LFG Bibliography in various versions and formats. in the directory /pub/lfg/lfg-information: FAQ [the latest version of the list of Frequently Asked Questions about LFG] in the directory /pub/lfg/lfg-introductions: pracinstrucsforlfg.ps [an introduction to LFG notation by Michael Wescoat] formal-architecture.ps [an introduction to LFG by Ron Kaplan] neidle.ps [an introduction to LFG by Carol Neidle] sadler.ps [a paper on recent developments in LFG by Louisa Sadler] in the directory /pub/lfg/lfg-presentations: Slides and handouts from LFG conferences and courses. in the directory /pub/lfg/papers: Papers that have been submitted to the LFG Archive. Compressed versions of some of these files are also available. The file names of the compressed versions are the same, except they have ".gz" at the end. There may be other LFG-related files in that directory as well, which you are welcome to retrieve. (3) You can get some files by email, via the Listserv "get" command. A list of currently available files can be obtained by sending a message to LISTSERV@listserv.linguistlist.org (please note: address the message to LISTSERV, not LFG). The message should contain the following command: index lfg The following files are available, and there may be additional files as well: LFG-bulletin.txt [the latest version of the LFG Bulletin] FAQ.txt [the list of Frequently Asked Questions] lfgbib.text [the LFG bibliography] To get a file, send a message to LISTSERV@listserv.linguistlist.org containing the following command: get <filename> For example, if you want to get the latest version of the FAQ, you would send a message to LISTSERV@listserv.linguistlist.org with the following command: get FAQ.txt You will receive the file in an email message.